Key Takeaways

  • The eight parts of speech are: noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, and interjection
  • Subject-verb agreement means singular subjects take singular verbs and plural subjects take plural verbs
  • Compound subjects joined by "and" take a plural verb; those joined by "or/nor" agree with the nearest subject
  • Collective nouns (team, group, committee) are usually treated as singular in American English
  • Indefinite pronouns like everyone, nobody, each, and either are singular and take singular verbs
  • Pronoun-antecedent agreement requires pronouns to match their antecedent in number, gender, and person
  • Common pronoun errors include using "me" as a subject, using "I" as an object, and unclear antecedents
  • Verb tenses must remain consistent within a sentence unless there is a clear reason for a shift
Last updated: February 2026

Parts of Speech & Subject-Verb Agreement

Grammar is essential for clear communication in healthcare. Errors in documentation can lead to misunderstandings that affect patient care. The HESI A2 Grammar section tests your mastery of English language mechanics.


The Eight Parts of Speech

Part of SpeechFunctionExample
NounNames a person, place, thing, or ideanurse, hospital, syringe, health
PronounReplaces a nounshe, he, it, they, who
VerbShows action or state of beingadminister, assess, is, were
AdjectiveDescribes a nounacute, severe, bilateral, elevated
AdverbModifies a verb, adjective, or adverbquickly, carefully, very, extremely
PrepositionShows relationship between wordsin, on, at, between, during, after
ConjunctionConnects words, phrases, or clausesand, but, or, because, although
InterjectionExpresses emotionOh! Ouch! Well,

Subject-Verb Agreement

The fundamental rule: A verb must agree with its subject in number.

Subject TypeVerb FormExample
Singular subjectSingular verb"The patient is stable"
Plural subjectPlural verb"The patients are stable"
Compound (and)Plural verb"The doctor and nurse are ready"
Compound (or/nor)Agrees with nearest"Neither the doctor nor the nurses are ready"

Tricky Subject-Verb Agreement Cases

1. Words between subject and verb (prepositional phrases): The subject is NEVER inside a prepositional phrase.

  • "The box of supplies is on the shelf" (subject = box, singular)
  • "The results of the test are normal" (subject = results, plural)

2. Collective nouns: Usually singular in American English:

  • "The team is meeting at 3:00"
  • "The committee has made its decision"

3. Indefinite pronouns:

Always SingularAlways PluralSingular or Plural
everyone, everybodybothall
someone, somebodyfewany
no one, nobodymanymost
anyone, anybodyseveralnone
each, either, neithersome
  • "Everyone is required to wash hands" (singular)
  • "Several patients are waiting" (plural)
  • "Some of the medication is expired" (singular — "medication" is uncountable)
  • "Some of the tablets are expired" (plural — "tablets" is countable)

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

A pronoun must agree with its antecedent (the noun it replaces) in number, gender, and person.

Correct: "Each nurse must update her or his patient records." (singular antecedent = singular pronoun) Correct: "The nurses must update their patient records." (plural antecedent = plural pronoun)

Common Pronoun Errors

Error TypeIncorrectCorrect
Subject/Object confusion"Me and the doctor discussed the case""The doctor and I discussed the case"
Object form as subject"Him and her went to the meeting""He and she went to the meeting"
Subject form as object"The supervisor spoke to he and I""The supervisor spoke to him and me"
Unclear antecedent"When the nurse spoke to the patient, she smiled" (Who smiled?)"The nurse smiled when she spoke to the patient"

Tip for subject vs. object pronouns: Remove the other person from the sentence. You would say "I discussed the case" (not "Me discussed"), so "The doctor and I" is correct.


Verb Tense Consistency

Maintain consistent verb tense within a sentence unless there is a logical reason for a shift:

  • Incorrect: "The patient was resting when the alarm rings." (past + present)
  • Correct: "The patient was resting when the alarm rang." (past + past)
  • Correct shift: "The patient reported that she takes her medication daily." (past reporting, present habitual action)

Verb Tenses in Detail

TenseFormExampleUse
Simple presentbase verb / verb+s"The nurse administers medication."Habitual actions, facts
Simple pastverb+ed (or irregular)"The patient received treatment."Completed past actions
Simple futurewill + verb"The doctor will order labs."Actions that haven't happened yet
Present progressiveam/is/are + verb-ing"The patient is resting."Actions happening now
Past progressivewas/were + verb-ing"The nurse was charting when the alarm sounded."Ongoing past action interrupted
Present perfecthas/have + past participle"The patient has improved since admission."Past action with present relevance
Past perfecthad + past participle"The patient had eaten before the test."Action completed before another past action

Nursing documentation typically uses past tense (what was done) and present tense (current status):

  • "Assessed patient at 0800. Vital signs are within normal limits."
  • "Patient reports pain level of 4/10. Administered Tylenol 650 mg PO as ordered."

Active vs. Passive Voice

VoiceStructureExample
ActiveSubject → Verb → Object"The nurse assessed the patient."
PassiveObject → was/were + past participle → by + subject"The patient was assessed by the nurse."
  • Active voice is preferred in most writing — it is clearer, more direct, and more concise
  • Passive voice is used when the actor is unknown or unimportant: "The medication was administered at 1400."
  • HESI A2 questions may ask you to identify or convert between active and passive voice

Commonly Confused Verb Forms

ErrorIncorrectCorrect
Lie vs. Lay"Lay down and rest.""Lie down and rest." (lie = recline; lay = place an object)
Sit vs. Set"Set in the chair.""Sit in the chair." (sit = be seated; set = place an object)
Rise vs. Raise"Raise up slowly.""Rise up slowly." (rise = go up; raise = lift something)

Memory tip: Lay, set, and raise all require a direct object (something being placed, set, or raised). Lie, sit, and rise do not take a direct object.

Test Your Knowledge

Select the sentence with correct subject-verb agreement.

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which sentence contains a pronoun error?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which indefinite pronoun is always SINGULAR?

A
B
C
D
Test Your KnowledgeFill in the Blank

Complete the sentence: "Neither the nurse nor the doctors _____ available." (was/were)

Type your answer below

Test Your Knowledge

Identify the verb tense error: "The patient was sleeping when the monitor beeps loudly."

A
B
C
D
Test Your KnowledgeMatching

Match each part of speech to its correct example.

Match each item on the left with the correct item on the right

1
Noun
2
Verb
3
Adjective
4
Adverb
5
Preposition
Test Your Knowledge

Which sentence has correct pronoun-antecedent agreement?

A
B
C
D